PDA

View Full Version : Supreme Court Refuses To Take Up Boy Scout Case



nickel
05-31-2006, 05:42 AM
this topic is about religion and legalities therein so please don't lock.


Supreme Court Refuses To Take Up Boy Scout Case

WASHINGTON -- The Supreme Court rejected an appeal Tuesday from an atheist father over Boy Scout recruiting at his son's public school.

John Scalise had asked the court to bar public schools from opening their doors to Boy Scout recruiters and promoting membership, arguing that the group discriminates against nonreligious boys and parents by denying them membership if they don't swear to religious oaths.

Scalise's dispute with the Scouts dates back to 1998, when his son was a third-grader in Mount Pleasant, Mich.

He claims he and his son were barred from a Scout program at the elementary school because they would not pledge "to do my duty to God and my country." They are nonreligious Humanists.


Michigan courts ruled that the school-Scout partnership did not advance religion in violation of constitutional dictates.

Attorneys for the Scouts and Mount Pleasant school system told justices that the appeal was frivolous.

A Michigan appeals court said that Mount Pleasant schools allowed other organizations to use class facilities, including a hospital group, an Indian tribe, a Baptist church, and a hockey association.

Scalise argued that his son, Benjamin, was taunted by classmates and humiliated by a Boy Scout recruiter in front of other students. Benjamin Scalise is now 17.

The Supreme Court's last Boy Scout case was in 2000. Justices ruled 5-4 at the time that the Boy Scouts can bar gays from serving as troop leaders. The ruling was written by Chief Justice William H. Rehnquist, who died last year.

Scalise's attorney, Timothy Taylor of Mount Pleasant, said taxpayer-funded schools are too cozy with the Boy Scouts.

"It's going on all over the country and has been for decades," he said
http://www.nbc5.com/education/9292468/detail.html?rss=chi&psp=nationalnews


should groups such as the boy scouts be allowed to disallow people who do not believe in God just as they exclude girls from becoming boy scouts?

VTGreg
05-31-2006, 06:30 AM
If there is an oath to being a Boy Scout or a member of any other club then the members should be expected to recite and attempt to fulfill that oath. No one was forcing this kid to be a member of the Boy Scouts.

Yossarian
05-31-2006, 07:34 AM
you see that the SCOTUS also limited the free speach of federal employees?

nickel
05-31-2006, 07:44 AM
*snip*
what do you think of the original topic cause you know going off on a tangent can get it locked.

AlwayzMarel
05-31-2006, 08:32 AM
Well isn't the boy scouts a private organization? If it is then I think they have the exclusive right to reject anyone, but if they are not then yea the man has the right to sue, they can not force religion on anyone. And religion should be left out of school, I don't need anyone trying to influence my children with a religion that is not taught at home.